Dozens of tourists – including a 10-year-old boy - spent the night dangling 12,500 feet in the air after a number of cable cars became stranded above the French Alps.
A total of 110 people were trapped when their Vallee Blance Cable Cars ground to a halt on Thursday afternoon, after high winds caused the cables carrying them to become tangled over Mont Blanc.
Sixty five people were evacuated by helicopter late on Thursday but the rescue operation had to be suspended overnight when clouds hampered visibility.
Those taken to safety on Thursday were brought to Chamonix and the Italian town of Courmayeur.
Frédéric Maurer, 49, and his daughter were among the first to be rescued. He told the Telegraph: “We were in the cab for two-and-a-half hours locked under the sun.
“We had just started from flagship station Helbronner on the Italian side, when everything froze.”
Rescuers provided blankets, food and water to help weather the chilly mountain night-time conditions. First aid workers stayed inside the cabins to reassure the passengers overnight.
The operation to rescue the remaining tourists resumed on Friday morning after rescuers managed to restart the cars by relaxing the tension of the tangled cables.
A total of 36 cable cars were halted during the incident.
The 5km ride connects Aiguille du Midi on the French side of the mountain and the Helbronner summit on the Italian border and usually takes 30 minutes to complete.